GCC has two warnings related to large stack frames. We were already
using the -Wframe-larger-than warning, but this reduces the threshold
from 10000 to 5000 bytes.
However that warning only covers the static part of frames (not
alloca). So this change also enables -Wstack-usage=10000 which covers
both the static and dynamic usage (alloca and variable length arrays).
Multiple changes are made throughout the code to reduce frames to fit
within these new limits.
Note that stack allocation of large strings can be a security issue.
For example, we had code like:
size_t len = strlen (fs->windows_systemroot) + 64;
char software[len];
snprintf (software, len, "%s/system32/config/software",
fs->windows_systemroot);
where fs->windows_systemroot is guest controlled. It's not clear what
the effects might be of allowing the guest to allocate potentially
very large stack frames, but at best it allows the guest to cause
libguestfs to segfault. It turns out we are very lucky that
fs->windows_systemroot cannot be set arbitrarily large (see checks in
is_systemroot).
This commit changes those to large heap allocations instead.
When libvirt is used, we can allow disks to be hotplugged.
guestfs_add_drive can be called after launch to hot-add a disk.
When a disk is hot-added, we first ask libvirt to add the disk to the
appliance, then we make an internal call into the appliance to get it
to wait for the disk to appear (ie. udev_settle ()).
Hot-added disks are tracked in the g->drives array.
This also adds a test.